Gas Exchange and Delivery Lecture
Gas Exchange and Delivery
- Key Factors for Increasing O₂ Delivery to Tissues:
- Increase air pressure.
- Increase partial pressure of O₂ (pO₂) in air.
- Increase amount of hemoglobin.
Oxygen Transport in Blood
Without Hemoglobin:
- Alveolar pO₂ ≈ Arterial pO₂, since oxygen does not dissolve well in blood without hemoglobin.
- Example: At pO₂ = 100 mm Hg, the amount of O₂ dissolved in plasma is limited (3 mL O₂/L blood).
With Hemoglobin:
- Total oxygen content depends on:
- Partial pressure of O₂ (pO₂).
- Amount of hemoglobin present.
- Saturation of hemoglobin (% saturation).
- Oxygen content of red blood cells at normal pO₂ (100 mm Hg):
- Ranges from zero (if not bound) to up to approximately 197 mL O₂/L blood with maximum hemoglobin saturation.
Modifying Hemoglobin's Carrying Capacity
- Factors affecting hemoglobin affinity for O₂:
- Increase in 2,3-BPG.
- Increase in temperature.
- Increase in CO₂ concentration.
- Decrease in pH (Bohr effect).
- Key Metrics:
- At lower pH (7.2), hemoglobin releases more oxygen compared to a higher pH (7.4).
- Higher temperature (37°C vs 20°C) increases O₂ release.
- The impact of shifting pCO₂ levels on O₂ saturation.
Total Oxygen Content of Arterial Blood
- Total O₂ content depends on:
- Amount of dissolved oxygen in plasma (influenced by inspired air composition, alveolar ventilation, diffusion, pulmonary edema, etc.)
- O₂ saturation of hemoglobin is influenced by:
- Alveolar pO₂.
- Changes in physical conditions (e.g., pH and temperature).
CO₂ Transport in Blood
- Summary of CO₂ Handling:
- Dry air has a total pressure of 760 mm Hg, with pO₂ = 160 mm Hg.
- Major routes of CO₂ transport:
- Bicarbonate Ion (HCO₃¯) in plasma (70%).
- Carbaminohemoglobin (HbCO₂), where CO₂ binds to hemoglobin (23%).
- Dissolved CO₂ in plasma (7%).
- Transport mechanism: CO₂ diffuses from muscle cells into systemic capillaries, where it is converted to bicarbonate and binds to hemoglobin.
Central Control of Respiration
- Mechanism of Breathing Control:
- Activity of inspiratory neurons increases during inspiration and turns off abruptly leading to passive expiration.
- Involvement of higher brain centers and reflex control from central nervous system (CN IX, X).
- The Pre-Bötzinger complex in the medulla regulates rhythms of breathing.
Questions for Understanding
- How does exercise affect oxygen release at lower pH levels?
- What happens to oxygen release as muscle cells warm up?
- Discuss the implications of low 2,3-BPG levels in blood stored in banks.
- What is the pO₂ of fetal blood leaving the placenta, given it is 80% saturated with O₂?
- What is the percent O₂ saturation of maternal hemoglobin at a fetal pO₂ of around 10 mm Hg?